Dear Commandant,
Dear Guards,
Dear Relatives and
Friends of the Swiss Guards,
1. From the very beginning of the Pontifical Swiss Guard an
unbroken tradition brings you together on this day which recalls your special
commitment to the welfare and life of the Successor of Peter. Therefore it is a
great joy for me to receive you this year as well in the Apostolic Palace, with
your parents, relatives and friends. I extend a special welcome to the new
recruits who will be admitted to your corps through the oath by which they
commit themselves to devoting a few years of their life to a very honourable and
responsible task in the heart of the universal Church.
2. Dear recruits, you have chosen to dedicate yourselves to a
deeply ecclesial service and through it you would like to bear witness to the
world. I sincerely thank you for this. You do not offer your service as
individuals, but as a community. On a day of celebration like today, it is a
blessing to be surrounded and supported by so many people. But to live this
community every day is also a challenge. If young men — like the members of
the Swiss Guard — are determined to walk a certain stretch of the road
together, they should look on their own hopes and concerns, their expectations
and their needs as reflected in the communities of the early Church.
Vital relationships between individuals, even between Jesus'
disciples, were the same in biblical times as they are now. Sacred Scripture
does not hide the fact that some people followed St Paul at the beginning, but
later left him to go their own way. Perfect harmony did not always prevail
because characters, temperaments and interests were so different. However, the
disciples who served Jesus exerted a powerful and inviting attraction. Paul, who
must have experienced as no one else that God can write straight on the crooked
lines of life, always explained in his writings how God loved his people and
never abandoned them in the ebb and flow of their history, in the tension
between fidelity and denial. God has given us the definitive fulfilment of this
abiding commitment to mankind through his Son, whom he sent into the world “as
a Saviour, according to his promise” (cf. Acts 13:23).
3. Dear Guards, I would like to encourage you to bear witness to
the love of God in Jesus Christ with youthful joy and vigour. This witness is
particularly expressed in two ways: in joining the Pontifical Swiss Guard, you
show your intention to dedicate your service in a special way to the Holy
Father, who has been entrusted with the pastoral care of the whole flock (cf. Jn
21:16). In addition, through your commitment to the various tasks assigned to
your corps, you testify to others who your Lord is and what motivates your work.
4. With this, I would also like to express a thought that is
particularly dear to me. Your efforts regarding training and service
regulations, technical skill and professional competence are important. It is
also important that you use your stay in Rome as a unique chance to sharpen your
image as Christians. I am thinking especially of your spiritual life: you must
ask yourselves what God's plan is for each of you. At the same time, I call your
attention to how important brotherly relations are between those who call
themselves Christian, both on and off duty. Frank, fraternal conversation can
sometimes be difficult and demanding, but if it takes place in an honest and
trustful way, it allows those who take part to develop mature personalities.
5. I take this occasion, dear young guards, to wish you a happy
time in the Eternal City. I invite the guards who have served a long time in the
corps as senior officers to foster trusting relations which can support and
encourage all the members of the Swiss Guard, even at difficult moments. I also
hope that during your time of service in Rome you will stay in close contact
with your parents, your relatives and all the friends you have in your country.
Everyone will then rejoice with you over the extraordinary opportunity you have
been given to have new experiences that will bear fruit.
As I invoke upon you the intercession of the Virgin Mary and of
your holy patrons, Nicholas of Flüe, Martin and Sebastian, I cordially impart
my Apostolic Blessing to you and to everyone who has come to be with you as you
take your oath.